We used this
story to illustrate the truth that God is Spirit—not a golden idol.
We first
introduced Moses, and said that at the time of our story, he had climbed Mount
Sinai to meet with God. Our Moses made
climbing motions all the way to a chair and that sat down for the time being. So he has been gone a while now, and the
people are starting to get nervous. They
remembered how God had led them around with a pillar of cloud by day (everyone
follows a leader holding up a pillar of cloud) and a pillar of fire by night
(another round of the room, following the pillar of fire). But now, no cloud, no fire, and no
Moses! But Moses’ brother is here, let’s
ask him what to do.
Ah
yes—before the story began, we passed out “jewelry”—necklaces, bracelets and
rings—made of shiny gold twisty-ties. So
now Aaron collects everyone’s jewelry in a bag.
Then he gets out a stool, puts some “firewood” on it, and orange scraps
for fire, and finally a large pot. He
dumps the jewelry into the pot and stirs it for a while. Then he reaches into the pot, behind the
piece of aluminum foil that is lining part of the pot, and pulls out a shiny
gold cow. He announces that this hereby
represents the god who brought them out of Egypt. He sticks it on the wall, then goes and gets
a bottle of wine and pretends to share it with everyone. Then Moses shows up, clutching a styrofoam
tablet bearing the ten commandments. He
is furious, and tries very hard to break the tablet over someone’s head but the
tablet is too strong. He is, however,
able to take the cow off the wall and rip that to pieces! He demands that everyone apologize to God for
representing Him as a cow, so everyone pulls their ears and says sorry. End of story.
Aaron had
gone around collecting people’s gold jewelry, so our game was going around
collecting gold things that had been hidden (not too carefully) in the side
bedrooms: lemons!
Then for the
craft, we talked about how, in the real Bible story (as opposed to the
tweaked-for-the-skit story), Moses had ground up the golden calf, sprinkled it
over water, and made the people drink it.
First we ground up some not-gold things: everyone got plastic cups full
of sugar cubes and a little bottle to smash them up with. We needed a full cup of sugar, so there was
lots of pounding. I was afraid the kids
might get bored with this but everyone stayed on task and asked for more cubes
when theirs got ground down—cool!
Finally we turned our attention to the gold things. Well over a year, someone had given me a gift
of an electric juicer. Well, here at
home, if I need to squeeze one or two lemons, I am certainly not going to drag
out an electric juicer! So I’d never
used it. But for having kids help
squeeze a dozen lemons, it was wonderful!
Everyone enjoyed this too. Then
we mixed the lemon juice & the sugar with water & enjoyed our
lemonade! Very popular craft!
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